BIRD GUIDING AROUND OSLO

Monday, 30 April 2018

I
answered one of my questions regarding the Three-toed Peckers today with their
absence meaning that they were just birds moving around looking for either for a
mate and/or a breeding territory. My time in Maridalen was not wasted though
with my first Redstarts and Pied Flycatchers of the year including birds
singing and on the edge of the still frozen lake my first Common Sandpiper. The
ice is now in the process of breaking up and is drifting around a bit. Rain is
forecast tomorrow which will hopefully mean the end of the ice and also a fall
of birds although temperatures of only 2C and NE winds do not promise too much.

In the
afternoon I had a group of all three hirundines together in Maridalen but they
were moving rapidly around and I imagine not finding much food. A Wood
Sandpiper also looked a bit forlorn.

my first Pied Fly (svarthvitfluesnapper) of the year - a male feeding on the sunny edge of a copse

and I later had this singing male

my first Common Redstart (rødstjert) of the year was this shy male and I later heard another bird singing

Sunday, 29 April 2018

Up at 5am
this morning and 4 glorious hours in Maridalen before breakfast was a fantastic,
if not particularly bird rich, start to today.

The first
good bird was before I even left the house when I heard the croaking of a
Red-throated Diver flying over the house whilst I was sitting on the loo! What
was quite possibly the same bird was flying many circuits of Maridalen when I
got there and seemed to be very annoyed that the lake was still frozen. A heavy
overnight frost meant that the temperature was -2C at 0520 and all the edges of
the lake had frozen over again.

Migration
was pretty much non-existent except for a single Curlew (I had hoped for
Whimbrel) and also a few gulls heading north. So I had no new birds for the year
and instead concentrated on finding breeding species.

On the
main island in the lake 2 pairs of Barnacle Geese seemed to be vying for
ownership of the island although I suspect that the Mute Swan pair that was
also there will win that fight should they decide to breed. A stop to listen
into the forest east of Maridalen revealed a singing Black Grouse but no
woodpeckers. Woodpeckers did reveal themselves other places though with a
couple of Green and many drumming Great Spotted. The biggest surprise though
was when I heard the drumming of Three-toed from an area I had always hoped
would house one. After a lot of work I eventually confirmed
that there were two birds drumming close to each other plus a Great Spot. It
also looked like both the Three-toes were females but I will try to confirm
that later in the week as I onnly saw one bird well at close range. After this I was able to enjoy the growing warmth of
the sun and the sound of 100’s of frogs croaking and swimming in an enormous
lake of spawn. I also found Whooper Swans on the nest, had drumming Common
Snipe, displaying Green Sandpipers, singing Tree Pipits, Willow Warblers,
Blackcaps and Chiffchaff and a male Kestrel catching and ripping the head off a
mouse.

So, there
may not have been anything too rare and the wonders of migration evaded me but
Maridalen delivered the goods as always.

male Kestrel (tårnfalk) with mouse

here it has just started on the mouse and a large chunk of fur is sailing through the air

a still frozen Maridalsvannet and the main island where a few gulls try to breed plus Barnacle Geese (maybe also Greylag and Canada) and perhaps this year, for the first time, Mute Swans

female Three-toed Woodpecker (tretåspett) one of two drumming birds. It will be interesting to see if they were jsut moving through to a breeding site or whether they have already found their breeding site

a huge concentration of frogs and spawn

a family trip to Fornebu revealed this Moorhen trying to hide from us by submerging itself. I have never witnessed this before but have frequently wondered where Moorhens have disappeared to and this would probably explain it

Friday, 27 April 2018

We are
experiencing the usual late April lull at the moment although I must admit it
surprises and disappoints me every year. Yesterday I walked out to the end of
Årnestangen in sunny weather and had to contend with hear haze plus water
levels that are far too high. There were still over 1000 Teal but it was only
possible to grill a small minority of them and a single Gadwall and 4 Pintail
were the best I could find. Lots of Ospreys are now back - I had at least 6
birds but migrating raptors were represented by a male Hen Harrier and two
Peregrines.

In
Maridalen it was frogs and adders that were the main excitement although a pair
of Cranes on the deck and still there today might be the pair that last year
looked like it was trying to establish itself in the area - maybe they will
succeed this year. A male Red-breasted Merganser was also a rare (less than
annual) sighting.

Today had
no new birds to offer. At
Fornebu the Water Rail was again actively singing and I had the superzoom ready
to film. And I had a brilliant frame filling 10 second sequence if it singing
but only when I went to stop the filming did I realise that I had not manage to
press record.....! I did manage some other sequences but nothing like the one I
didn't record.

Adder (hoggorm)

first frog of the year

Red-breasted Merganser (siland) - a common bird in Oslo but not in Maridaen

Wednesday, 25 April 2018

An overnight frost meant
that small pools had a layer of ice at 0830 this morning and it also helped slow
down the de-icing of the main lake which is still 99% frozen but the open areas
are growing rapidly. I can remember large parts of the lake still being frozen
on 1 May in previous years but suspect that this year will be a bit special.

Cold nights and little
cloud are not conducive for many new grounded migrants and Maridalen and Fornebu
had little new to offer today although a Lesser Whitethroat at Fornebu was a
year tick and a singing Blackcap was the first I have heard. Highlight here was
undoubtedly seeing a Water Rail “singing” in the freshly cleared reedbed. The
intensity of its singing suggests it is unpaired so far.

In Maridalen I was witness
to lots of interesting swan behaviour. First, I had a group of 4 young Whooper
Swans and two adults on one open area of water. The youngsters were together
but not with the adults. I thought that the birds might be the Maridalen breeding
pair and some of last years young but when I saw one of the youngsters aggressively
chasing the adults and the adults not fighting back I reappraised that view and
assumed that the adults were a visiting pair although the youngsters may well
be locally bred. A short time later at the other side of the lake I heard a lot
of Whooper Swan noise and then saw a pair of Whooper Swan attacking the pair of
Mute Swans that has been around for about a week. That a pair of Mute Swans has
hung around so long in spring suggests that they are thinking of establishing
themselves here (Mutes have not bred here before and the female in the pair at
least is clearly a 3cy bird and a first-time breeder). The local breeding pair
of Whoopers is clearly not happy to be sharing “their” area of open water and
really went at the Mutes. One of the Mutes fled on a couple of occasions
although returned to its mate that seemed to be receiving less abuse and even
called a bit. Later in the day I saw no swans at all on the main lake although
the breeding pair of Whoopers was back on their breeding pool.

I would normally be more than happy with a view and photo like this of a Water Rail (vannrikse)

but actually got to see it "singing"

and a close up. Note the blown up throat and the powerful thighs

they are exterely thin birds made for running through reedbeds

and jumping

This video of the Water Rail was taken handholding the bazooka so there is a lot of shake.... :

a swan standoff in Mairdalen

one of the Mute Swans had just been chased off and whilst the whoopers celebrated he (?) flew back to his mate

joining the mate although I am unsure which is which

Mute Swan (knoppsvane)

Whooper Swan (sangsvane)

Whoopers in attack mode. Both they and the Mute Swans nearly flew into over head wires

one of the Mutes with a colour ring that I unfortunately cannot read

this Common Buzzard (musvåk) was displaying (and "mewing") in Maridalen

Tuesday, 24 April 2018

It's all getting a bit too busy for blogging! The end of April
is always my favourite time and at the moment it is the movement of Teal and
other dabbling ducks that is occupying me with the never-ending searching for
something rare in their midst.

Yesterday I was at Nordre Øyeren. At this time of the year it is
usually the mighty Svellet where all the action is but the very abrupt end of
winter over the last two weeks has caused a surge of melt water with water
levels rising 45cm over the last 3 days and being now 60cm over normal levels.
This means Svellet has gone from being iced over to immediately being flooded
so conditions are pants. There is a chance that water levels will fall again
before the melt waters from the mountains start coming but all predictions are
for serious flooding this spring. The only area with any mud showing is in
Snekkervika and at the tip of Årnestangen. Fog and rain (which came too late in
the morning to force birds down) made viewing tricky but amongst at least 2000
Teal I found a pair of Garganey, a pair of Shoveler, a male Gadwall, 6 Pintail
and a 100 odd Wigeon so it was only a yank that was missing.

Wader passage hasn’t
really started but there were 40 Curlew, 7 Ringed Plover and a couple of LRPs;
things will be very different in a little over a weeks time.

Today I did the tour de
Aurskog-Høland. Here there is if anything too much flooding but conditions will
be perfect once the floods subside. There were lots of Teal to be seen here as
well but I found nothing of note amongst them despite grilling every single
one!

I had Marsh Harriers at
three localities including a nest building male, a pair of Smew at
Hellesjøvannet, my first House Martins of the year and also some waders. A few
Greenshank were to be expected alongside many Green Sandpipers but two Wood
Sandpipers were early and deserved to be grilled properly (this is a real
stringers species and the vast majority of April records (or at least 99% of
those before 20 April) will be Green Sandpipers – the earliest record ever
documented with a photo in Artsobs is 23 April.

At Fornebu yesterday I caught up
with a couple of Shore Larks that have been there for a while plus saw a ringed
Ringed Plover (in addition to 6 unringed Ringed Plovers and a Little Ringed Plover)
that had been ringed 2.8.2017 further south in Norway. My sighting of will I
hope in someway help justify the rather obscene bling it has had to carry.

In Maridalen, Willow Warblers
and Black-throated Divers have arrived and there are a few Ring Ouzels on the
fields and Teal on floodwater.

Black-throated Diver (storlom), the closest of 4 in Maridalen today

and a pair

this male Marsh Harrier (sivhauk) was nest building (although I did not see a female). This is 3cy male and will be breeding (or at least attempting to) for the first time

another an much older male. The younger male has a dark trailing edge to the wing and tail and juvenile like head whereas this bird is much cleaner

the same older male

this female Marsh Harrier is very dark and I am unsure of age

these 3 collared Pink-footed Geese were amongst 34 of their kin. S94 was ringed on Svalbard on 03.08.2012 and has been regularly recorded in NO, DK, NL & B since then. GA5 was ringed in mid Norway on 02.05.2017 and since then has been seen in DK & B. GH2 was ringed at the same time as GA5 (unsurprisingly as they seem to be paired) and would appear to have been seen together with him since

pair of Smew (lappfiskand) at Hellesjøvannet. Embarassingly enough I only noticed the female on the computer..

male Wheatear (steinskvett)

I'll let you decide if this counts as a record shot of a Wood Sand (grønnstilk)

although think this one of a Greenshank (gluttsnipe) is OK

Gadwall (snadderand) in the rain yesterday

a/the Pied Wagtail like wagtail at Fornebu although I think it is most likely a hybrid with White

Ring Ouzel (ringtrost) in Maridalen

this unfortunate Ringed Plover (sandlo) received its bling on Jomfruland on 02.08.2017. It was with the breeding birds at Fornebu but I only saw it briefly and couldn't find it again so it may just have been passing through.

crappy photo but at least educational in that it shows Ringed and Little Ringed Plover (dverglo) together

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About Me

My name is Simon Rix and I am an English birder who has lived in Oslo since 2001. I am a bird guide and served a term on the Norwegian Rarities Committee (NSKF) from 2012-2018.
This blog primarily records my birding around Oslo.